Jacquet was born in
Sail-sous-Couzan, Loire. and
Nancy. In 1991, he accepted a position with the National Technical Department (
DTN, Direction Technique Nationale). In 1992, he was appointed the assistant to then national team manager
Gérard Houllier. After the France national team was knocked out of
qualifying for the
1994 FIFA World Cup by
Israel and
Bulgaria, Jacquet was made the manager of the national team, but only provisionally. After a promising series of friendly matches including a victory over
Italy, his provisional status was upgraded to permanent. Jacquet initially selected
Eric Cantona as captain and made him the team's playmaker. Cantona had successfully restarted his career in the
FA Premier League and was playing some of the best football of his career, but he kicked a Crystal Palace fan in January 1995, which earned him a year-long suspension from all international matches. As Cantona was the key playmaker, Jacquet was forced to make major changes to the team in the wake of his suspension. Jacquet revamped the squad with some new blood and built it around
Zinedine Zidane and other younger players while dropping Cantona,
Jean-Pierre Papin, and
David Ginola. Jacquet succeeded in helping France qualify for the
Euro 96. Making it all the way to the semi-finals,
Les Bleus managed to show they could survive without veterans such as Papin, Cantona, or Ginola. Jacquet himself stated that the team had done well without Cantona, and that he wanted to keep faith with the players who had taken them so far.
1998 World Cup jersey emblazoned with Jacquet's name with the match ball used in the
1998 FIFA World Cup Final, on display at the
Musée National du Sport. In the months that followed the
Euro 96, Jacquet honed his team's skills in a series of friendly matches. He adopted a very defensive strategy. The press began to criticize the team manager, calling his methods "
paleolithic". In June 1997 at
Le Tournoi, cries of "Resign!" could be heard from the stadium as the French team finished third behind
England and
Brazil, only coming out ahead of
Italy by virtue of goal difference. The press continued to criticize Jacquet. The media's distrust of Jacquet reached fever pitch in May 1998 when, instead of a list of 22 players meant to play in the World Cup, Jacquet gave a list of 28 players, causing the sports daily ''
L'Équipe'' to write an editorial arguing that Jacquet was not the right man to lead the French team to victory. However, all that changed when the team began to play in the play-off rounds for the
1998 FIFA World Cup. It was clear that though Jacquet's team was far from being the most flamboyant in French history, it was a perfectly well-oiled machine that neither injury, nor expulsions, nor suspensions, managed to stop. On 12 July 1998, France soundly beat
Brazil 3–0 in the
Final. Key to the victory was when Jacquet pointed out to his players that Brazilian marking at set-pieces was somewhat suspect, and Zidane headed two goals in from corner kicks. Following the victory, Jacquet announced that he was leaving his position as manager of the France national team due to previous pressures and criticisms against him. He then became technical director of French football in August 1998, a position which he held until his retirement in December 2006. ==Career statistics==